On the Necessity of Proving Things

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I would add one more. A source is credible, if it can demonstrate the validity of what he is talking about. Mere appeal to some authority does not make a source “credible”. According to an old Greek proverb someone claimed that once he jumped really far on the island of Rhodus. He was challenged: “Hic Rhodus, hic salta!”. (This is Rhodus, jump here!)
Yeah, i agree. I was including demonstrating in publishing research and results, however i concede that thinks don’t need to be publishing in order to be demonstrated. 🙂
 
Re: the thread title.

I don’t think its necessary to prove things. Some people still would not believe even if you proved it to them.
 
Re: the thread title.

I don’t think its necessary to prove things. Some people still would not believe even if you proved it to them.
Exactly. They would not believe. Because they would know it. And knowledge is infinitely superior to mere belief. Once knowledge steps in the picture, the belief is no longer necessary, not is it possible.
 
Exactly. They would not believe. Because they would know it. And knowledge is infinitely superior to mere belief. Once knowledge steps in the picture, the belief is no longer necessary, not is it possible.
Thats an interesting idea. If you, Albert, actually knew God existed, what difference would it make. As opposed to just believing He exists.
Would your relationship with God be different in both cases.
 
Yeah, i agree. I was including demonstrating in publishing research and results, however i concede that thinks don’t need to be publishing in order to be demonstrated. 🙂
Well, let’s cut some slack here. The verification, falsification, demonstration principles are not always applicable to past events. Sometimes they are, when those past events left observable, physical evidence behind them. An example would be a volcanic eruption, like the one which demolished Pompeii. There is physical evidence, which can be examined and the past occurrence of the eruption thus demonstrated.

But these events are a minority. Most of the time, there is nothing left behind, just stories, sometimes written down, sometimes passed on orally. What is the procedure which historians follow in these cases? They collect as many documents as they can. They compare the documents and examine how close the descriptions are. They collect other writings from the same authors, and see if their writings are corroborated by external, independent writings. The more of these happen, the more likely it is that the descriptions are correct, and the more credibility the writings carry. Such a process only raises the likelyhood of veracity of the documents, but never makes it as certain as an observable physical evidence.

These criteria are seriously missing. There are only a few, unknown writers. They have not written anything until at least 40 or more years passed after the alleged events. There is no evidence that they were actual eye-witnesses. There are no independent comments, even though the Romans were famous for their meticulous record keepings. The writers never wrote about anything else, which could establish their credibility. On top of that, most of the writings tell us scientifical nonsense. Walking on water, resurrecting the dead, rising from the dead, magically producing food, worldwide flood, and the list goes on and on.

Now, the slack ends here. This whole appeal to historical documents is just a huge cop-out. After all God is supposed to exist now, he is supposed to be active today. According to the text God was very active back then. Ordering full-scale genocides, personally killing every human and animal on the planet (except a few selected ones). Personally giving stone tablets with his commandment carved into them. He even came in a human form and got executed (as if a god could be executed). And then he went dormant. No more communication, no more appearance.

Bring up current, observable evidence, don’t rely on old, many times translated and edited texts, which were consensed into a book, after having been arbitrarily selected from among similar writings. Hic Rhodus, hic salta!
 
And it seem that my reply has gone completely over your head. The benefits make the assumptions valid.
All of those lists of things you provided do not provide evidence for anything in and of themselves. You know this very well. Whether the assumptions are valid or not, in the end, they are still assumptions.
 
Every system has some unproven, basic assumptions, axioms, postulates. That is the only way to avoid infinite regress. No one denies that. What of it? These basic assumptions are not articles of faith. They are accepted because they are self-evident.
This is what we’ve been saying most of this thread and you continued to deny it. Anything that is excepted without proof is analogous to an article of faith. If we do not except something as self-evident, simply because we believe it to be so (with good reason) or that we trust that it is, please demonstrate otherwise.
To be more precise, they are the logical corollaries of those basic postulates.
Yes, and whatever they are, they are based on unproven ideas. So what does that truly make of them?
Didn’t we observe him together in the example? That was the thought experiment all about.
I know he exists and I know because I believe it would be illogical to not believe so. But that is not proof for anything. Can you prove that he exists, so that I no longer have to just assume that he does?
It is the currently prevailing theory, and nothing contradicts it. Physicists at the time of Newton assumed a fully deterministic, clock-work-like universe, which “travels” along the lines of absolute time within an absolute space. Einstein showed that this world-view was incorrect and that time and space are not independent from matter/energy. However, even Einstein was reluctant to accept quantum mechanics according to his oft-quoted saying: “God does not play dice with the universe”. Our view of what “the world really is” - is constantly changing. Why is that a problem?
It is a theory. That is the problem. It is erroneous to take theories as absolute fact. It is completely fine to believe them, but always be aware of the fact that they could be wrong. As WSP has repeatedly demonstrated, a theory is not set in stone. It can be overturned. Theories, as logical as they are, are nothing more.
And to what degree do I “claim” empiricism?
At the beginning of the thread, you said you were an empiricist or at least you defended the theory with the interest that you were one. Based on your appeals to rationalism, you could not be the empiricist that we had in mind.
Guess what? I am intimately familiar with the concept of probabilities. I have been lecturing it for many years. In reality there is no “absolute” certainty, only in the exact sciences - which are also based upon basic axioms and postulates.
And I have not been lecturing for many years. Degrees, etc. are hardly a measure of true knowledge. True knowledge is obtained when we admit we know nothing, to paraphrase Socrates.
What is that you wish to talk about?
Here are a few requirements, if you wish to conduct a conversation (not a debate). They are my requirements, take them, or leave them, as you wish:
  1. there are basic axioms, postulates, principles which are not articles of faith.
  2. the current world-view may change in the future, but **for now **it is the basis of consideration, with the proviso that it may change, if warranted.
  3. empiricism is a method of making hypotheses about reality. It is not a method employed by the exact sciences.
  4. only in the exact sciences does one **prove **anything. To prove something is to show a logical chain which ends at the basic axioms and postulates.
  5. in the natural sciences one **substantiates **or **verifies **a hypothesis, or **falsifies **it.
  6. rational and logical thinking is not to be abandoned. (They are not the same.)
These terms are not negotiable. The ball is in your court.
I am not going to accept these “non-negotiable” terms. If I did, then I would be forced to agree with everything you have said, much of which I find faulty. There wouldn’t be much of a point in discussing anything at that point.
 
Thats an interesting idea. If you, Albert, actually knew God existed, what difference would it make. As opposed to just believing He exists.
Would your relationship with God be different in both cases.
Even though you asked Albert, I will give you my answer. It depends on the information about God. If I only knew that a superior being exists, and nothing else, then I would change nothing. I refuse to believe that the Bible accurately represents this supreme being. (But let’s not get into that.)

If I also knew what his requirements are on how to conduct a life to his pleasing, then my answer depends on those requirements. If his requirements are akin to the ones described in the Old Testament (killing those who “offended” him, etc.), then I would simply flip a birdie and say a few cuss-words. And then I would accept the consequences. If I found that his requirements are to be a decent, helpful person and not to hurt others, then there would be no change necessary. If it were along these lines, but to greater level, then I would do my best to follow it. In a nutshell, this would be my response. 🙂
 
I am not going to accept these “non-negotiable” terms. If I did, then I would be forced to agree with everything you have said, much of which I find faulty. There wouldn’t be much of a point in discussing anything at that point.
As you wish. Though you are mistaken. To accept them would not force you to accept anything. Those requiremets are broad enough to allow meaningful discourse, and narrow enough to avoid meaningless posts. But, as you say, you don’t accept them, so I thank you for your answer.

I am glad we cleared it up at the beginning and not after a plethora of futile posts.

Just out of curiousity, which ones do you find unacceptable? All of them? Some of them? But don’t reply if you don’t want to.
 
What is that you wish to talk about?

Here are a few requirements, if you wish to conduct a conversation (not a debate). They are my requirements, take them, or leave them, as you wish:
  1. there are basic axioms, postulates, principles which are not articles of faith.
false. all axioms, postulates, and principles are, at their core articles of faith. please give an example of such a thing that doesnt rely on faith in its truth at somepoint in its logical build up
  1. the current world-view may change in the future, but **for now **it is the basis of consideration, with the proviso that it may change, if warranted.
false, there is no reason to suspect that the current body of scientific knowledge is any more stable than it has been at any point in the past. in fact the entire march of history shows this to be a false notion. scientists in 200 years from now may feel the same way we do about the body of scientific knowledge that we currently have, as we do about the body of scientific knowledge that scientists had 200 years ago.

this is simply an historically false position to take. why would you even want to do that?

if you deny that you are talking about the current body of scientific knowledge, then what does the term 'current worldview" mean? whose current worldview?
  1. empiricism is a method of making hypotheses about reality. It is not a method employed by the exact sciences.
  1. only in the exact sciences does one **prove **anything. To prove something is to show a logical chain which ends at the basic axioms and postulates.
what are you calling the ‘exact sciences’
  1. in the natural sciences one **substantiates **or **verifies **a hypothesis, or **falsifies **it.
verification/falsification schemes are self refuting and therefore false.

as you have already admitted this, why bring it up again?
  1. rational and logical thinking is not to be abandoned. (They are not the same.)
logical thinking is great. thats exactly what ive been doing to you. though what do you mean by rational? what you think is rational? what i think is rational? they are quite different.
These terms are not negotiable. The ball is in your court.
why do you always try to set terms that leave you in the best situation? you are always trying to stack the deck, you have had this temple of science crumble down around you for hundreds of posts.

your position has already been shown false. why then should it be adopted?
 
LOL again you show utter ignorance. 20% of the uk population holds a degree of which one must imagine 1/4 at most will be science based, and as i said i don’t have an ordinary, i have a degree with honours.

statistics.gov.uk/census2001/profiles/commentaries/people.asp
im not british.

27% of us have 4 year degrees. it is not a big deal at all.
Also again you can’t even comprehend basic english, or you again are lying. I never ever said “why do you think that makes you more aware of ‘science’ than anybody else?” I didn’t saying anyone else, i said you, because you are clearly scientifically illiterate.
oh, you mean ‘just me’, actually, from what you have given as your education, im much more educated than you. i simply dont feel the need to brag or to act as though people are less educated then me because they dont agree with me.
 
Utterly irrelevant and this fallacy has already been pointed out to you. However lets take the light bulb example. Say a i went back in time and took a torch. I put in on an claimed to a tribesman that i am god and that i can magic light. Well given that the tribesman has no way of assessing my claim he would **not be justified **in believing me, however there is now an unexplained phenomena and many people, people with your critical analysis skills would accept my claim.

Lets say i went to my brother with the same torch and the same claim. Do you think he would believe me? Of course NOT. For he understands exactly what a torch is.
we dont believe in magic, just processes that we dont yet understand. the tribesman may believe in magic. do you see the difference?

unless you believe in magic, the word has no place in the conversation.
The point is until we understand a process we must WITHHOLD belief. Sure we know many things are credible that people in the past didn’t know about, and in the future people will know things we don’t know. HOWEVER until these things have been demonstrated to be credible we must refrain from making unfounded claims about them. Very basic reasoning.
why? i dont believe in magic, i believe in clarkes 3rd law.

what you call ‘magic’ is simply a process that has yet to be explained. you keep acting like any process you dont currently understand must be magic. thats ludicrous is that an example of what they teaach in ‘honors’ courses?😛
 
oh, you mean ‘just me’, actually, from what you have given as your education, im much more educated than you. i simply dont feel the need to brag or to act as though people are less educated then me because they dont agree with me.
You may well be, but you clearly are NOT more educated than me in science, for you have shown time and time again that you don’t even have the most basic understanding of science.

Again i was not bragging i was pointing you that your argument is nothing more than an argument from ignorance. You do not understand science, you are ignorant of science, and due to your lack of scientific education you think you are correct.
 
we dont believe in magic, just processes that we dont yet understand. the tribesman may believe in magic. do you see the difference?

unless you believe in magic, the word has no place in the conversation.

why? i dont believe in magic, i believe in clarkes 3rd law.

what you call ‘magic’ is simply a process that has yet to be explained. you keep acting like any process you dont currently understand must be magic. thats ludicrous is that an example of what they teaach in ‘honors’ courses?😛
Again this has been clearly explained to you, just because there are processes we do not understand DOES NOT MEAN every wacky claim is just a process we do not understand. DUH! 🤷
 
Again WSP, which you keep dodging…

We KNOW the bible is full of nonsense, talking snakes, world wide floods, cosmos created in 7 days. So we know the bible is NOT a credible source. So given the bible is full of fictional stories give me reason why i should believe the virgin birth is not also a fictional story?
 
Even though you asked Albert, I will give you my answer. It depends on the information about God. If I only knew that a superior being exists, and nothing else, then I would change nothing. I refuse to believe that the Bible accurately represents this supreme being. (But let’s not get into that.)

If I also knew what his requirements are on how to conduct a life to his pleasing, then my answer depends on those requirements. If his requirements are akin to the ones described in the Old Testament (killing those who “offended” him, etc.), then I would simply flip a birdie and say a few cuss-words. And then I would accept the consequences. If I found that his requirements are to be a decent, helpful person and not to hurt others, then there would be no change necessary. If it were along these lines, but to greater level, then I would do my best to follow it. In a nutshell, this would be my response. 🙂
I think this is one of the great proofs of Christianity; even though it is no proof at all either.
…If I found that his requirements are to be a decent, helpful person and not to hurt others…
How could such a message cause such trouble and reaction; of course, thats the other great proof of Christianity, though its no proof either; Taoism, with its own sort of Yin-Yang, did’nt attract violent reactions.
 
Again WSP, which you keep dodging…

We KNOW the bible is full of nonsense, talking snakes, world wide floods, cosmos created in 7 days. So we know the bible is NOT a credible source. So given the bible is full of fictional stories give me reason why i should believe the virgin birth is not also a fictional story?
If there was a Creator of the universe then nothing would be impossible.
Now, you cannot prove there is not a Creator. Whereas we can show you that there is a Creation. You are sitting on it. :)🤷
 
Nope, why don’t you go and read a scientific document. They don’t consisit of this happen because i saw it happen LMAO! LOL
what ‘scientific’ document proves that the provenance? what would science even have to do wit it?
They were not eyewitness,
yes they were. can you provide evidence they were not?
even among chrsitan scholars there is an agreement that nobody knows the authors of the bible.
no there isnt. please provide evidence of this.
The bible has no credibility,
why not? because you dotn understand the processes by which some event occured?
it claims that snakes talk,
they do! havent you ever seen doctor doolittle?
there was a world wide flood,
funny, but thats a story across a great many cultures.
the earth was made in 7 days,
there is no such thing as ‘time’. as demonstrated by the theoretical physicist Julian Barbour.

youtube.com/watch_popup?v=WKsNraFxPwk#t=19
all of which we know are utter nonsense.
we dont know that, at all. they are simply processes that we dont yet understand.
Oh it also claims a virgin got pregnant.
and i demonstrated how that is entirely possible by our current understanding of science.
Given the track record of the bible
what track record?
i am going to appeal to consistency and conclude this is also utter hog wash.
actually, considering that all these arguments have already been crushed, your simply demonstrating that you dotnt care what the truth is, but rather that your world view not be disturbed. 😛
 
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